In re the Estate of Colvin

4 Md. Ch. 126
CourtHigh Court of Chancery of Maryland
DecidedDecember 15, 1853
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 4 Md. Ch. 126 (In re the Estate of Colvin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering High Court of Chancery of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
In re the Estate of Colvin, 4 Md. Ch. 126 (Md. Ct. App. 1853).

Opinion

The Chancellor:

This case comes before the court upon exceptions to the report of the Auditor, and has been submitted and argued on the part of Benjamin H. Ellieott, the former committee and receiver.

In the Auditor’s account, D., filed with his report of the 5th of November, 1853, the receiver is charged with the aggregate amount of sundry vouchers for which he had received credit in the account A., previously reported, amounting to $117 98, and this charge is the subject of the first exception on his part.

The vouchers Nos. 121, 122, 123, 124 and 125, which in part make up the sum credited in account A., are not, in my judgment, proper to be allowed. They are for stationery, which do not come within the range of disbursements which a committee or receiver is permitted to make at the expense of the estate. They are neither legal costs or counsel foes, and so far as I am informed, have never been allowed. The exception, therefore, with reference to these items must be overruled.

But, in my opinion, tho vouchers Nos. 126 and 127, are proper to he allowed. Mr. Ellieott was appointed committee of the estate of the lunatic on the 15th of September, 1851, and [128]*128it appears to me, these sums come fairly within the rule regulating allowances in such cases.

The second exception of the receiver relates to the charge against him in account D., of $1200, allowed for counsel fees, in account A., being supported by vouchers Nos. 150, 151,152 and 153, in part. The rule with reference to allowances to the committee of a lunatic is believed to be correctly stated in the Maryland Ch. Pr., 236. The first allowance is for the cost of the commission which the author says is understood to include the legal costs with counsel fees, paid by the petitioner. They are, he says, all allowed unless excluded by a previous order of the court. The estate, in this case, is a very large one, and on that account and because of the necessity of proceeding with great caution in the discharge of his duty, a liberal allowance should be made to the committee for counsel fees paid for professional services rendered him in that capacity.

It appears from the record before me, that there was no doubt of the lunacy of Rachel Colvin when the petition was. filed in Baltimore County Court, by Richard C. Warford, in November, 1850, nor that she was in that condition as early as April, 1849. In fact, Elisha Warford and those who co-operated with him, insisted that her lunacy commenced at an earlier period, and it was the controversy in relation to this point which produced much of the expense attending the proceedings before the cause was transferred to this court. Fees paid to counsel for conducting this part of the controversy, cannot be allowed out of the estate. They must be paid by the parties who carried it on, for purposes interesting to themselves. The voucher No. 150, was, therefore, properly rejected by the Auditor in account D.

Nor can counsel fees be allowed for services rendered the parties in that part of the case which related to the person who should be appointed committee. If the parties interested, differ and litigate this point, they must do it at their own expense. Elisha Warford, and those who united with him, objected to the appointment of Richard O. Warford and his sister, and recommended Mr. Ellicott. They succeeded, but it does not fol[129]*129low, that the counsel employed by them are to be paid out of the estate. The counsel fees referred to in the book of practice before mentioned, are foes paid by the petitioner in conducting the inquisition of lunacy under which the party is found to be a lunatic. In this case the petition for the writ de lunático inquirendo was filed by Richard 0. Warford, and not by Elisha Warford, the person upon whoso recommendation, with others, Ellicott was appointed committee of the estate. The former has preferred no claim for an allowance, and the latter is entitled to none for legal services rendered in litigating the question of a proper person to be appointed. The law designates no person who shall be appointed committee, and, therefore, it is unlike the case of Young ex parte, 8 Gill, 285, where it was decided that an administrator, whose right to administer was successfully established, would be allowed for counsel fees. Upon this principle, the vouchers, Nos. 151 and 152, were properly rejected by the Auditor; It has been already stated, that the petition upon which the writ to inquire into the lunacy of Miss Colvin issued, was filed by Richard C. Warford, and that Elisha Warford and his associates interposed, not for the purpose of disputing her lunacy, but to show that it commenced at a period anterior to the time found by the jury, and the great mass of evidence contained in the record was directed to that point. The vouchor No. 151, upon its face shows that it was for services rendered to Elisha Warford and his associates in that part of the controversy. It is apparent from the voucher, that the money was paid for services rendered upon the petition of Elisha Warford and others against Richard 0. Warford and another, and had reference to the question which they were litigating respecting the period of the commencement of the lunacy of Rachel Colvin. The commission of lunacy which issued on the petition of Richard C. Warford had already been executed when Elisha Warford and others interposed, by their petition, and objected to the inquisition, because it did not carry the lunacy back to an earlier period. Surely costs incurred in a controversy of this nature cannot be regarded as costs of the commission. Toucher No. 152, appears to be for legal services [130]*130as to the appointment of the committee, and this for the reason before stated, cannot be allowed.

But, in my opinion, a credit should be allowed for the sums mentioned in voucher No. 153. They appear to have been paid for legal services rendered the committee in the discharge of his duty as such, in defending and protecting the estate of the lunatic, and are, therefore, proper and fair allowances.

The third exception of the receiver is against the charge in account D., of two-thirds of the costs of suit allowed him in account A., and it appears to me, the exception is well taken. Upon the face of the account they are stated to be the petitioner’s costs, and come within the rule applicable to such cases.

The fourth exception refers to the charge in account D., of $175, for rent of dwelling house of the deceased, Rachel Colvin, from the 25th of January, 1853, to the date of the account. She died on the 24th of January, 1853, and this fact was brought to the notice of the court by a petition filed by Mr. Ellicott, on the 2d of February following, in which, upon the grounds and under the circumstances therein stated, the order and direction of the court was asked to protect the committee from responsibility. By a previous order, he had been authorized to occupy the dwelling house, and he set forth in his petition that he could not afford to pay the rent such a house would command, and he desired to know whether, now that the lunatic was dead, he should continue to act as before, in the capacity of committee, until some person should appear authorized to take possession of the estate. Upon this petition no order was passed, the court thinking that the death of the lunatic put an end to the authority and office of the committee, and Mr.

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Related

Horton v. Horton
149 A. 552 (Court of Appeals of Maryland, 1930)

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Bluebook (online)
4 Md. Ch. 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-estate-of-colvin-mdch-1853.